THE MICHIGAN DAILY estling Schedule Starts Getting Tough uin for Wolverines in Future Meets Co-Captain Rivalry Feature( In 'M'-MSU Basketball Gam By DAVE LYON ginning this Saturday, the dule starts getting tough again Michigan's wrestling team. aving expended relatively little t in their last three meets nst Northwestern, Purdfie, and ois, the Wolverine matmen have to contend with Iowa, nesota, and Michigan State on essive weekends. meet record marred only by losses to Pitt and Cornell, has estab- lished itself as a contender for the Big Ten meet title. But the results of the next three meets should indicate how far Michigan's young but ambitious team can go in the Conference affair next month. This is how the coming opposi- sion lines up: 1 Iowa, which will host Michigan I chigan, sporting a 0-2 dual- (Saturday night, has smothered six, GARGOYLE STAFF MEETING Turs., Feb. 12 at 7:30 STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Big Ten opponents while- compiling a 7-0 dual-meet record. The de- fending Big Ten champions have convincingly defeated Michigan State and Minnesota, and half the starting lineup boasts unbeaten records. Minnesota finished fourth in the 1958 Conference meet, and this year supports a balanced squad with many good and few outstand- ing individuals. The Gophers come here Feb. 21. What chance does Michigan have of beating any or all of these up- coming opponents? A wrestling team is only as good as its indi- vidual members, so a consideration of individuals is in order. Mike Hoyles, Wolverine junior, is one of the Conference's best at 123 pounds. How he stands in rela- tion to Iowa's Larry Moser, 1958 Big Ten runnerup at 123; will be determined this Saturday. Minne- sota's Ron Andrews may also give- Hoyles some trouble. Michigan captain Larry Murray, 130, will have stiff competition from Iowa's once-beaten John Kelly in trying to extend his string of three straight victories. Michi- gan's principal weak spot'is at 137, where the Wolverines are still looking for their first victory this season. Sophomores To Be Picked Jim Blaker, 147, should have little trouble improving on his 3-2-1 record at Iowa. Coach Cliff Keen must select from four able sophomores -- Don Corriere, Dick Fronczak, Dennis Fitzgerald, and Karl Fink-to fill the 157, 167, and1 177 positions. Iowa gets stronger as the weights progress. Heavyweight Fred Olm, 5-1-1 for the season, should improve that record in the coming weeks. One of Iowa's three heavies is unde- feated, but has competed in only five of seven meets. ORCHESTRAS by Bud-Mor 1103 South University NO 2-6362 tEmc-ono<=ocmo< to By JIM BENAGH Four of the finest seniors In Michigan basketball in recent years are readying themselves for a final showdown at East Lansing this Saturday. Michigan State's Johnny Green and Bob Anderegg and Michigan's George Lee and M. C. Burton are looking forward to the weekend with the present Big Ten race, revenge and personal statistics all jammed in their thoughts. Holds First Place Green and Anderegg will be most concerned about holding MSU in first place in the present Conference title chase. This two- some helped the Spartans tie for first place two years ago and finish runnerup last season. Lee and Burton are interested in getting Michigan back in the chase in order to win their first crown in their three years. The Wolverine pair, two of the most heralded prepsters ever to come out of state, aided Michigan's fifth place finish in 1956-57-the high- est standing Coach Bill Perigo has had at Ann Arbor. The Wolverine seniors are re- membering the 79-69 defeat hand- ed them by State last year, while the Spartan duo would like to even the overall series with Michigan. BUILDING --Daily--Michael Rontal THINKING ABOUT THE "BIG ONE"-Michigan's co-captains M. C. Burton (standing) and George Lee pause a moment from practice as the Wolverines prepare for their only meeting of the year with Michigan State. Burton and Lee will be facing MSU for the fourth and final time of an exciting three-year series. All new people invited I Send Your Valentine o r F3 n,i~i AIRFLIGHT a to EUROPE Le9i ;may. 1" [J[ r" {tip i":v kK ti : Ry TOM WITECKI Contracts and information available now at the Union Student Offices Monday-Friday from 2-5 -- An outstanding member of one of the best crops of sophomores ever to appear on the Michigan winter sport scene is all-around gymnast Richard Monpetit. The stocky sop: joins sprinter Tom Robinson, swimmer Frank Legacki and cager John Tidwell as a member of a group of year- lings that seem destined to engrave their names next to some of the all-time greats in Michigan ath- letic history. Three-Meet Winner In all three meets held so far this season, the Canadian young- ster has won the all-around gym- nast title-a coveted honor which goes to the performer who piles up the highest total of points in the five gymnastic events, exclud- ing the trampoline and tumbling competition. Hailing from Verdum, Quebec, which is a small town just outside Montreal, the sophomore is one of many performers gym coach Newt Loken has succeeded in luring from our northern neighbors. Last year's captain and one of Michigan's all-time gymnastic greats Ed Gagnier, along with present team members Nino Mar- ion and Wolfgang Dozauer all are from the land of the Maple Leaf. Gymnast Monpetit Joins Soph Elite Living in a area where hockey is almost a religion, Monpetit played the Canadian national game as a member of his high school team. This sport along with baseball, which he confesses was his favorite, occupied most of his time until he discovered gymnas- tics at the age of fifteen. -Quick To Learn Introduced to the sport by Fritz Besslich, who had competed for Germany in the Olympic games, he caught on fast, making his high school team and eventually de- veloping into one of the top Cana- dian junior stars. Monpetit, who found gymnastics "challenging" and "diversified," concentrated on the sport in his last year of high school and it paid off the following summer when he won the Canadian Junior National Championship. Monpetit had met Marion and Gagnier while competing in sev- eral gym meets and the following fall joined them after he received an athletic scholarship tender from Michigan. Concentrates on High Bar This winter he is going to con- centrate on the high bar, an event he must master if he wants to fulfill his Olympic Game ambi- tions. He and Marion, both mem- bers of the Canadian Pan-Ameri- can team which will compete in Chicago this summer, hope to represent their country at Rome in 1960. Comparing Monpetit to Gagnier, who competed for Canada at Mel- bourne in 1956, Loken said, "Rich has an important competitive quality which Ed also had, that of coming through under fire. This is essential, for gymnastics is a sport which puts a great deal of pres- sure on the individual." The sophomore's ambitions aside from thoughts of a Big Ten gym title and a free trip to Italy, are to earn a master's degree in physi- cal education and become the first gymnastics coach at the Univer- sity of Montreal. "+- 1 d rxr w ro y .,y's" '. rcr .+x .^-?. : PRO SPORTS: 3ruins Move into Third inNHL By The Assodlated Press Ranger nemesis Bronco Horvath scored the winning goal with less than eight minutes remaining last night to climax a three-goal period comeback that gave Boston a 5-3 victory over New York. 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